Rhamnose Promoter Expression System

ABSTRACT

Vectors expressible in a host that is the rhaBAD promoter region of the L-rhamnose operon operably linked to a transcriptional unit that is:
         a) a nucleic acid sequence which is heterologouse to the host, and   b) a prokaryotic signal sequence operably linked to the nucleic acid sequence.       

     The prokaryotic signal sequence is selected from signal peptides of periplasmatic binding proteins for sugars, amino acids, vitamins and ions. The expression of the nucleic acid sequence is controlled by the promoter region. The vector is used for the regulated heterologous expression of a nucleic acid sequence in a prokaryotic host. This is an isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence expressible in a host is the promoter region of the L-rhamnose operon. There is a method for producing a polypeptide in a host using the vector.

The present invention concerns vectors for the heterologous expressionof nucleic acids encoding e. g. polypeptides such as recombinantproteins in prokaryotic hosts. More specifically, the present inventionrelates to new vectors expressible in a host comprising the rhaBADpromoter region of the L-rhamnose operon operably linked to atranscriptional unit comprising

-   a) a nucleic acid sequence which is heterologous to said host-   b) a prokaryotic signal sequence operably linked to said nucleic    acid sequence, whereas said prokaryotic signal sequence is selected    from signal peptides of periplasmatic binding proteins for sugars,    amino acids, vitamins and ions and, whereas the expression of said    nucleic acid sequence is controlled by said promoter region.    Furthermore the invention relates to the use of these vectors for    the heterologous expression of nucleic acids encoding e. g.    polypeptides.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Many systems have been described for the heterologous expression ofnucleic acids encoding e. g. polypeptides such as recombinant proteinsin prokaryotic systems. However, most heterologous gene expressionsystems in prokaryotic host systems have relied exclusively on a limitedset of bacterial promoters. The most widely used prokaryotic promotershave included the lactose [lac] (Yanisch-Perron et al., 1985, Gene 33,103-109), and the tryptophan [trp] (Goeddel et al., 1980, Nature(London) 287, 411-416) promoters, and the hybrid promoters derived fromthese two [tac and trc] (Brosius, 1984, Gene 27:161-172; Amann andBrosius, 1985, Gene 40,183-190). Other inducible promoter systems suchas the araB promoter inducible by arabinose (WO 86 04356), the rhamnosepromoter rhaSB inducible by L-rhamnose (WO 03068956) or the rhamnosepromoter rhaBAD inducible by L-rhamnose (WO 2004/050877) have beendescribed as well for the heterologous expression of proteins. WO2004/050877 describes the use of a rhaBAD promoter for the heterologousexpression of nitrilase in E. coli. After induction with L-rhamnose,nitrilase activity in resting-cell assays could be obtained. However, inparticular for the expression of complex polypeptides such as antibodiesor antibody fragments it is advantageous to export the polypeptide fromthe cytoplasma to non-cytoplasmic locations (secretion) by using signalsequences, since the overproduction of heterologous proteins in thecytoplasm is often accompanied by the misfolding and segregation intoinsoluble aggregates (inclusion bodies). However, since the signalsequence can influence secondary and tertiary structure formation in themature region of secretory polypeptides, the choice of the appropriatesignal sequence in combination with an useful promoter is important forhigh production of functional polypeptides. Thus, there is a need toprovide alternative prokaryotic expression systems for the heterologousexpression of nucleic acid sequences.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

These and other objects as will be apparent from the foregoingdescription have been achieved by providing new vectors, which areuseful for high-level expression of a desired heterologous product, andwhich comprise the rhaBAD promoter region of the L-rhamnose operon, aheterologous nucleic acid sequence and a prokaryotic signal sequenceselected from signal peptides of periplasmatic binding proteins forsugars, amino acids, vitamins and ions. In a first aspect, the object ofthe present invention is to provide a new vector expressible in a hostcomprising the rhaBAD promoter region of the L-rhamnose operon operablylinked to a transcriptional unit comprising

-   a) a nucleic acid sequence which is heterologous to said host-   b) a prokaryotic signal sequence operably linked to said nucleic    acid sequence, whereas said prokaryotic signal sequence is selected    from signal peptides of periplasmatic binding proteins for sugars,    amino acids, vitamins and ions and, whereas the expression of said    nucleic acid sequence is controlled by said promoter region. Also    provided are: the use of said new vector for the regulated    heterologous expression of a nucleic acid sequence in a prokaryotic    host; an isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence expressible in    a host comprising the rhaBAD promoter region of the L-rhamnose    operon, a heterologous nucleotide sequence and a prokaryotic signal    sequence selected from signal peptides of periplasmatic binding    proteins for sugars, amino acids, vitamins and ions; a prokaryotic    host transformed with said vector or said isolated and purified    nucleic acid sequence; a method for producing a polypeptide in a    host using said vector; and a vector comprising a promoter region, a    heterologous nucleic acid sequence and a translation initiation    region consisting of the sequence AGGAGATATACAT.

Other objects and advantages will become apparent to those skilled inthe art from a review of the ensuing detailed description, whichproceeds with reference to the following illustrative drawings, and theattendant claims.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

FIG. 1 shows plasmid pBW22-Fab-H containing the L-rhamnose induciblepromoter (PrhaBAD), sequences coding for signal sequences operablylinked to the light chain (ompA-VL3-CL) and the heavy chain (phoA-VH-CH)of a Fab fragment, and a transcription termination region (rrnB).

FIG. 2 shows plasmid pBLL15 containing a melibiose inducible promoter(PmelAB2), sequences coding for signal sequences operably linked to thelight chain (ompA-VL3-CL) and the heavy chain (phoA-VH-CH) of a Fabfragment, and a transcription termination region (rrnB).

FIG. 3 shows dotblot results (with anti-human light chain for detectingFab, alkaline peroxidase conjugated) of lysozyme extracts of theuminduced (−) and induced (+) W3110 strains with the differentexpression plasmids. The time intervals are indicated.

FIG. 4 shows plasmid pAKL14 containing the L-rhamnose inducible promoter(PrhaBAD) and the Fab-H genes with altered signal sequences.

FIG. 5 shows dot blot of lysozyme extracts of uninduced (−) andL-rhamnose induced strain W3110 (pAKL14). The time when samples weretaken is indicated (with anti-human light chain for detecting Fab,alkaline peroxidase conjugated).

FIG. 6 shows a Western blot of lysozyme extracts of L-rhamnose inducedstrain W3110 (pAKL14). The time after induction when the samples weretaken is indicated (with anti-human light chain for detecting Fab,alkaline peroxidase conjugated). Lane 1: Standard (1.28 μg); lane 2:W3110 (pAKL14), ind., 3 h; lane 3: W3110 (pAKL14), ind., 5 h; lane 4:W3110 (pAKL14), ind., 7 h; lane 5: W3110 (pAKL14), ind., 12 h; lane 6:W3110 (pAKL14), ind., 23 h; lane 7: W3110 (pAKL14), not ind., 23 h.

FIG. 7 shows SDS-PAGE of lysozyme extracts of different W3110 strainswith high Fab-H antibody concentrations. The strains producing the lightand heavy chain without signal sequences are used as a negativereference (lane 1: Marker; lane 2: W3110 (pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H); lane 3:W3110 (pBW22-Fab-H); lane 4: W3110 (pBLL15), lane 5: W3110 (pAKL14);lane 6: Standard (2 μg)).

FIG. 8 shows plasmid pAKL15E containing the melibiose inducible promoter(PmelAB2) and the Fab-H genes with altered signal sequences.

FIG. 9: shows SDS-PAGE of lysozyme extracts of strain W3110 (pAKL15E) inthe presence or absence of the inducer melibiose. The position of thelight and heavy chain is indicated (lane 1: Marker; lane 2: W3110(pAKL15E), not induced; lane 3: W3110 (pAKL15E), induced).

FIG. 10 shows plasmid pBW22-pelB-S1 comprising the L-rhamnose induciblerhaBAD promoter, a sequence coding for a PelB signal peptide operablylinked to a sequence coding for a single chain antibody (scFv, S1), anda transcription termination region (rrnB).

FIG. 11 shows SDS-PAGE for crude extracts of not induced (−) and induced(+) strain W3110 (pBW22-pelB-S1). Samples were taken after differenttime intervals as indicated. The soluble and insoluble protein fractionsafter lysozyme treatment were analyzed. An arrow indicates the scFvprotein. M=Mark12, molecular weight standard of Invitrogen.

FIG. 12 shows the broad-host-range plasmid pJOE4782 comprising theL-rhamnose inducible rhaBAD promoter in combination with the genes ofthe regulatory proteins RhaS and RhaR of the L-rhamnose operon ofEscherichia coli. Plasmid pJOE4782 further contains a sequence codingfor a MalE signal peptide operably linked to a sequence coding for theGFP reporter protein.

FIG. 13 shows plasmid pAKLP2 comprising the L-rhamnose inducible rhaBADpromoter and a sequence (nitA) coding for a Nitrilase protein.

FIG. 14 shows SDS-PAGE of cells of the induced Pseudomonas putida strainKT2440 (pAKLP2). Samples were taken after different time intervals asindicated. An arrow indicates the Nitrilase protein. M=Mark12, molecularweight standard of Invitrogen.

FIG. 15 shows plasmid pAKLP1 comprising the L-rhamnose inducible rhaBADpromoter and sequences coding for the Fab-M heavy and light chains whichare operably linked to a sequence coding for the OmpA signal peptide anda sequence coding for the PhoA signal peptide, respectively.

FIG. 16 shows SDS-PAGE of cells of the induced Pseudomonas putida strainKT2440 (pAKLP1). Samples were taken after different time intervals asindicated. The arrows indicate the FabM heavy and light chains.M=Mark12, molecular weight standard of Invitrogen.

FIG. 17 shows SDS-PAGE of fermentation samples of the Escherichia colistrain W3110 (pBW22-pelB-S1). Samples were taken after different timeintervals (in hours) as indicated. An arrow indicates the scFv protein.M=Mark12, molecular weight standard of Invitrogen.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

As used herein, the following definitions are supplied in order tofacilitate the understanding of the present invention.

A “vector expressible in a host” or “expression vector” is a polynucleicacid construct, generated recombinantly or synthetically, with a seriesof specified polynucleic acid elements that permit transcription of aparticular nucleic acid sequence in a host cell. Typically, this vectorincludes a transcriptional unit comprising a particular nucleic acidsequence to be transcribed operably linked to a promoter. A vectorexpressible in a host can be e. g. an autonomously or self-replicatingplasmid, a cosmid, a phage, a virus or a retrovirus.

The terms “host”, “host cell” and “recombinant host cell” are usedinterchangeably herein to indicate a prokaryotic cell into which one ormore vectors or isolated and purified nucleic acid sequences of theinvention have been introduced. It is understood that such terms refernot only to the particular subject cell but also to the progeny orpotential progeny of such a cell. Because certain modifications mayoccur in succeeding generations due to either mutation or environmentalinfluences, such progeny may not, in fact, be identical to the parentcell, but are still included within the scope of the term as usedherein.

The term “comprise” is generally used in the sense of include, that isto say permitting the presence of one or more features or components.

“Promoter” as used herein refers to a nucleic acid sequence thatregulates expression of a transcriptional unit. A “promoter region” is aregulatory region capable of binding RNA polymerase in a cell andinitiating transcription of a downstream (3′ direction) coding sequence.Within the promoter region will be found a transcription initiation site(conveniently defined by mapping with nuclease S1), as well as proteinbinding domains (consensus sequences) responsible for the binding of RNApolymerase such as the putative −35 region and the Pribnow box.

“L-rhamnose operon” refers to the rhaSR-rhaBAD operon as described forE. coli in Holcroft and Egan, 2000, J. Bacteriol. 182 (23), 6774-6782.The rhaBAD operon is a positively regulated catabolic operon whichtranscribes RhaB, RhaA and RhaD divergently from another rha operon,rhaSR, with approximately 240 bp of DNA separating their respectivetranscription start sites. The rhaSR operon encodes the twoL-rhamnose-specific activators RhaS and RhaR. RhaR regulatestranscription of rhaSR, whereas RhaS bind DNA upstream at −32 to −81relative to the transcription start site of rhaBAD. Furthermore therhaSR-rhaBAD intergenic operon contains CRP binding sites at positions−92,5 (CRP 1) relative to the transcription start site of rhaBAD and CRPbinding sites at positions −92,5 (CRP 2), −115,5 (CRP 3) and 116,5 (CRP4) relative to the transcription start site of rhaSR as well as abinding site for RhaR spanning −32 to −82 relative to the transcriptionstart site of rhaSR.

With “rhaBAD promoter region of the L-rhamnose operon” is meant therhaBAD operon consisting essentially of the rhaBAD transcriptioninitiation site, the putative −35 region, the Pribnow box, the CRPbinding site CPR1, the binding site for RhaS relative to thetranscription start site of rhaBAD as well as CRP binding sites CRP 2-4,and binding site for RhaR relative to the transcription start site ofrhaSR. With “rhaBAD promoter” is meant the promoter of the rhaBAD operonconsisting essentially of the rhaBAD transcription initiation site, theputative −35 region, the Pribnow box, the binding site for RhaS and theCRP1 binding site region relative to the transcription start site ofrhaBAD, and the CRP binding site CRP4 or a part thereof relative to thetranscription start site of rhaSR.

“CRP” means “Catabolite regulator protein”. “CRP” is often referred inthe art as “cyclic AMP receptor protein”, which has the synonymousmeaning. CRP is a regulator protein controlled by cyclic AMP (cAMP)which mediates the activation of catabolic operons such as theL-rhamnose operon.

An “enhancer” is a nucleic acid sequence that acts to potentiate thetranscription of a transcriptional unit independent of the identity ofthe transcriptional unit, the position of the sequence in relation tothe transcriptional unit, or the orientation of the sequence. Thevectors of the present invention optionally include enhancers.

“Transcriptional unit” as used herein refers to a nucleic acid sequencethat is normally transcribed into a single RNA molecule. Thetranscriptional unit might contain one gene (monocistronic) or two(dicistronic) or more genes (polycistronic) that code for functionallyrelated polypetide molecules.

A nucleic acid sequence is “operably linked” when it is placed into afunctional relationship with another nucleic acid sequence. For example,DNA for a signal sequence is operably linked to DNA for a protein if itis expressed as a preprotein that participates in the secretion of theprotein; a promoter is operably linked to a coding sequence if itaffects the transcription of the sequence; or a translation initiationregion such as a ribosome binding site is operably linked to a nucleicacid sequence encoding e. g. a polypeptide if it is positioned so as tofacilitate translation of the polypeptide. Linking can be accomplishedby ligation at convenient restriction sites. If such sites do not exist,the synthetic oligonucleotide adaptors or linkers are used in accordancewith conventional practice.

“Nucleic acid” or “nucleic acid sequence” or “isolated and purifiednucleic acid or nucleic acid sequence” as referred in the presentinvention might be DNA, RNA, or DNA/RNA hybrid. In case the nucleic acidor the nucleic acid sequence is located on a vector it is usually DNA.DNA which is referred to herein can be any polydeoxynuclotide sequence,including, e.g. double-stranded DNA, single-stranded DNA,double-stranded DNA wherein one or both strands are composed of two ormore fragments, double-stranded DNA wherein one or both strands have anuninterrupted phosphodiester backbone, DNA containing one or moresingle-stranded portion(s) and one or more double-stranded portion(s),double-stranded DNA wherein the DNA strands are fully complementary,double-stranded DNA wherein the DNA strands are only partiallycomplementary, circular DNA, covalently-closed DNA, linear DNA,covalently cross-linked DNA, cDNA, chemically-synthesized DNA,semi-synthetic DNA, biosynthetic DNA, naturally-isolated DNA,enzyme-digested DNA, sheared DNA, labeled DNA, such as radiolabeled DNAand fluorochrome-labeled DNA, DNA containing one or more non-naturallyoccurring species of nucleic acid. DNA sequences can be synthesized bystandard chemical techniques, for example, the phosphotriester method orvia automated synthesis methods and PCR methods. The purified andisolated DNA sequence may also be produced by enzymatic techniques.

RNA which is referred to herein can be e.g. single-stranded RNA, cRNA,double-stranded RNA, double-stranded RNA wherein one or both strands arecomposed of two or more fragments, double-stranded RNA wherein one orboth strands have an uninterrupted phosphodiester backbone, RNAcontaining one or more single-stranded portion(s) and one or moredouble-stranded portion(s), double-stranded RNA wherein the RNA strandsare fully complementary, double-stranded RNA wherein the RNA strands areonly partially complementary, covalently crosslinked RNA,enzyme-digested RNA, sheared RNA, mRNA, chemically-synthesized RNA,semi-synthetic RNA, biosynthetic RNA, naturally-isolated RNA, labeledRNA, such as radiolabeled RNA and fluorochrome-labeled RNA, RNAcontaining one or more non-naturally-occurring species of nucleic acid.

With “variants” or “variants of a sequence” is meant a nucleic acidsequence that vary from the reference sequence by conservative nucleicacid substitutions, whereby one or more nucleic acids are substituted byanother with same characteristics. Variants encompass as welldegenerated sequences, sequences with deletions and insertions, as longas such modified sequences exhibit the same function (functionallyequivalent) as the reference sequence.

As used herein, the terms “polypeptide”, “peptide”, “protein”,“polypeptidic” and “peptidic” are used interchangeably to designate aseries of amino acid residues connected to the other by peptide bondsbetween the alpha-amino and carboxy groups of adjacent residues.

The term “isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence” refers to thestate in which the nucleic acid sequence will be, in accordance with thepresent invention. The nucleic acid sequence will be free orsubstantially free of material with which they are naturally associatedsuch as other nucleic acids with which they are found in their naturalenvironment, or the environment in which they are prepared (e. g. cellculture) when such preparation is by recombinant technology practised invitro or in vivo.

The terms “transformation”, “transformed” or “introducing a nucleic acidinto a host cell” denote any process wherein an extracellular nucleicacid like a vector, with or without accompanying material, enters a hostcell. The term “cell transformed” or “transformed cell” means the cellor its progeny into which the extracellular nucleic acid has beenintroduced and thus harbours the extracellular nucleic acid. The nucleicacid might be introduced into the cell so that the nucleic acid isreplicable either as a chromosomal integrant or as an extra chromosomalelement. Transformation of appropriate host cells with e. g. anexpression vector can be accomplished by well known methods such asmicroinjection, electroporation, particle bombardement or by chemicalmethods such as Calcium phosphate-mediated transformation, described e.g. in Maniatis et al. 1982, Molecular Cloning, A laboratory Manual, ColdSpring Harbor Laboratory or in Ausubel et al. 1994, Current protocols inmolecular biology, John Wiley and Sons.

“Heterologous nucleic acid sequence” or “nucleic acid sequenceheterologous to a host” means a nucleic acid sequence which encodes e.g. an expression product such as a polypeptide that is foreign to thehost (“heterologous expression” or “heterologous product”) i. e. anucleic acid sequence originating from a donor different from the hostor a chemically synthesized nucleic acid sequence which encodes e. g. anexpression product such as a polypeptide that is foreign to the host. Incase the host is a particular prokaryotic species, the heterologousnucleic acid sequence is preferably originated from a different genus orfamily, more preferred from a different order or class, in particularfrom a different phylum (division) and most particular from a differentdomain (empire) of organisms.

The heterologous nucleic acid sequence originating from a donordifferent from the host can be modified, before it is introduced into ahost cell, by mutations, insertions, deletions or substitutions ofsingle nucleic acids or a part of the heterologous nucleic acid sequenceas long as such modified sequences exhibit the same function(functionally equivalent) as the reference sequence. A heterologousnucleic acid sequence as referred herein encompasses as well nucleicsequences originating from a different domain (empire) of organisms suchas from eukaryotes (of eukaryotic origin) such as e. g. human antibodieswhich have been used in phage display libraries and of which singlenucleic acids or a part of the nucleic acid sequences have been modifiedaccording to the “codon usage” of a prokaryotic host.

“Signal sequence” or “signal peptide sequence” refers to a nucleic acidsequence which encodes a short amino acid sequence (i.e., signalpeptide) present at the NH2-terminus of certain proteins that arenormally exported by cells to non-cytoplasmic locations (e.g.,secretion) or to be membrane components. Signal peptides direct thetransport of proteins from the cytoplasm to non-cytoplasmic locations.

“Translation initiation region” is a signal region which promotestranslation initiation and which functions as the ribosome binding sitesuch as the Shine Dalgarno sequence.

“Transcription termination region” refers to a sequence which causes RNApolymerase to terminate transcription. The transcription terminationregion is usually part of a transcriptional unit and increases thestability of the mRNA.

“Antibody” refers to a class of plasma proteins produced by the B-cellsof the immune system after stimulation by an antigen. Mammal (i.e.Human) antibodies are immunoglobulins of the Ig G, M, A, E or D class.The term “antibody” as used for the purposes of this invention includes,but is not limited to, polyclonal antibodies, monoclonal antibodies,anti-idiotypic antibodies and auto-antibodies present in autoimmunediseases, such as diabetes, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritisas well as chimeric antibodies. The basic antibody structural unit isknown to comprise a tetramer. Each tetramer is composed of two identicalpairs of polypeptide chains, each pair having one “light” (about 25 kDa)and one “heavy” chain (about 50-70 kDa). The amino-terminal portion ofeach chain includes a variable region of about 100 to 110 or more aminoacids primarily responsible for antigen recognition. Thecarboxy-terminal portion of each chain defines a constant regionprimarily responsible for effector function.

Light chains are classified as either kappa or lambda. Heavy chains areclassified as gamma, mu, alpha, delta, or epsilon, and define theantibody's isotype as IgG, IgM, IgA, IgD and IgE, respectively. Withinlight and heavy chains, the variable and constant regions are joined bya “J” region of about 12 or more amino acids, with the heavy chain alsoincluding a “D” region of about 10 more amino acids.

The term antibody is used to mean whole antibodies and binding fragmentsthereof. Binding fragments include single chain fragments, Fv fragmentsand Fab fragments.

The term “single-chain antibody” includes such non-natural antibodyformats which combine only the antigen-binding regions of antibodies ona single stably-folded polypeptide chain. As such, single-chainantibodies are of considerably smaller size than classicalimmunoglobulins but retain the antigen-specific binding properties ofantibodies. Single-chain antibodies are widely used for a variety ofdifferent applications, including for example as therapeutics,diagnostics, research tools etc.

The term Fab fragment is sometimes used in the art to mean the bindingfragment resulting from papain cleavage of an intact antibody. The termsFab′ and F(ab′)2 are sometimes used in the art to refer to bindingfragments of intact antibodies generated by pepsin cleavage. In thecontext of the present invention, Fab is used to refer generically todouble chain binding fragments of intact antibodies having at leastsubstantially complete light and heavy chain variable domains sufficientfor antigen-specific bindings, and parts of the light and heavy chainconstant regions sufficient to maintain association of the light andheavy chains. An example of such Fab is described in Skerra et al.,1988, Science 240(4855), 1038-41, for instance. A Fab fragment e. g. ofthe IgG idiotype might or might not contain at least one of the twocysteine residues that form the two inter-chain disulfide bonds betweenthe two heavy chains in the intact immunoglobulin. Usually, Fabfragments are formed by complexing a full-length or substantiallyfull-length light chain with a heavy chain comprising the variabledomain and at least the CH1 domain of the constant region. In addition,the C-terminal cysteine on the light chain may be replaced with serineor another amino acid to eliminate the interchain disulfide bond betweenthe heavy and light chains according to the present invention.

Further encompassed are chimeric antibodies which are antibodies whoselight and heavy chain genes have been constructed, typically by geneticengineering, from immunoglobulin gene segments (e. g., segments encodingthe variable region and segments encoding the constant region), forexample, belonging to different species. For example, the variable (V)segments of the genes from a mouse monoclonal antibody can be joined tohuman constant (C) segments, such as IgG1 an IgG4. A typical chimericantibody is thus a hybrid protein consisting of the V or antigen-bindingdomain from a mouse antibody and a C or effector domain from a humanantibody. Chimeric antibodies have the same or similar bindingspecificity and affinity as a mouse or other nonhuman antibody thatprovides the variable regions of the antibody.

The term “human antibody” includes antibodies having variable andconstant regions (if present) derived from human germline immunoglobulinsequences including either natural or artificial, engineered affinitymaturation. Human antibodies of the invention can include amino acidresidues not encoded by human germline immunoglobulin sequences (e. g.,mutations introduced by random or site-specific mutagenesis in vitro orby somatic mutation in vivo). However, the term “human antibody” doesinclude antibodies in which CDR sequences derived from the germline ofanother mammalian species, such as a mouse, have been grafted onto humanframework sequences (i. e. humanized antibodies). Functional variants ofsuch “human antibodies”, e.g. truncated versions thereof or engineeredmuteins where e.g. individual proline or cysteine residues have beenengineered by the means of genetic engineering well known in the art areencompassed by the term, in contrast. Examples of such may be found e.g.in WO 98/02462. However, the term only relates to the amino acidsequence of such antibody, irrespective of any glycosylation or otherchemical modification of the peptide backbone.

In one aspect, the present invention provides a vector expressible in ahost comprising the rhaBAD promoter region of the L-rhamnose operonoperably linked to a transcriptional unit comprising

-   a) a nucleic acid sequence which is heterologous to said host-   b) a prokaryotic signal sequence operably linked to said nucleic    acid sequence, whereas said prokaryotic signal sequence is selected    from signal peptides of periplasmatic binding proteins for sugars,    amino acids, vitamins and ions and, whereas the expression of said    nucleic acid sequence is controlled by said promoter region.

The vector according to the invention is preferably an autonomously orself-replicating plasmid, a cosmid, a phage, a virus or a retrovirus. Awide variety of host/vector combinations may be employed in expressingthe nucleic acid sequences of this invention. Useful expression vectors,for example, may consist of segments of chromosomal, non-chromosomaland/or synthetic nucleic acid sequences. Suitable vectors includevectors with specific host range such as vectors specific for e. g. E.coli as well as vectors with broad-host-range such as vectors useful forGram-negative bacteria. “Low-copy”, “medium-copy” as well as “high copy”plasmids can be used.

Useful vectors for e. g. expression in E. coli are: pQE70, pQE60 undpQE-9 (QIAGEN, Inc.); pBluescript Vektoren, Phagescript Vektoren,pNH8A,pNH16a,pNH18A, pNH46A (Stratagene Cloning Systems, Inc.); ptrc99a,pKK223-3, pKK233-3, pDR540, pRIT5 (Pharmacia Bio-tech, Inc.); pLG338,pACYC184, pBR322, pUC18, pUC19, pKC30, pRep4, pACYC177, pACYC184,pRSF1010 and pBW22 (Wilms et al., 2001, Biotechnology andBioengineering, 73 (2) 95-103) or derivates thereof such as plasmidpBW22-Fab-H or plasmid pAKL14. Further useful plasmids are well known tothe person skilled in the art and are described e.g. in “CloningVectors” (Eds. Pouwels P. H. et al. Elsevier, Amsterdam-New York-Oxford,1985).

Preferred vectors of the present inventions are autonomously orself-replicating plasmids, more preferred are vectors with specific hostrange such as vectors specific for e. g. E. coli. Most preferred arepBR322, pUC18, pACYC177, pACYC184, pRSF1010 and pBW22 or derivatesthereof such as pBW22-Fab-H or pAKL14, in particular pBW22-Fab-H orpAKL14, most particular pAKL14.

In a preferred embodiment, the rhaBAD promoter region of the L-rhamnoseoperon is the rhaBAD promoter. In a particular preferred embodiment, therhaBAD promoter consists of the sequence SEQ ID NO. 1, a sequencecomplementary thereof and variants thereof. Preferably the rhaBADpromoter region of the L-rhamnose operon, the rhaBAD promoter and therhaBAD promoter consisting of the sequence SEQ ID NO. 1, a sequencecomplementary thereof and variants thereof are from the L-rhamnoseoperon of E. coli.

In another preferred embodiment of the invention the vector expressiblein a prokaryotic host comprises apart from the rhaBAD promoter region ofthe L-rhamnose operon operably linked to a transcriptional unitfurthermore sequences encoding the L-rhamnose-specific activators RhaSand RhaR including their respective native promoter sequences. Uponexpression the RhaS and RhaR proteins control the activity of the rhaBADpromoter.

As prokaryotic signal sequence selected from signal peptides ofperiplasmatic binding proteins for sugars, amino acids, vitamins andions, signal peptides such as PelB (Erwinia chrysantemi, Pectate lyaseprecursor), PelB (Erwinia carotovora, Pectate lyase precursor), PelB(Xanthomonas campestris, Pectate lyase precursor), LamB (E. coli,Maltoporin precursor), MalE (E. coli, Maltose-binding proteinprecursor), Bla (E. coli, Beta-lactamase), OppA (E. coli, Periplasmicoligopeptide-binding protein), TreA (E. coli, periplasmic trehalaseprecursor), MppA (E. coli, Periplasmic murein peptide-binding proteinprecursor), BglX (E. coli, Periplasmic beta-glucosidase precursor), ArgT(E. coli, Lysine-arginine-ornithine binding periplasmic proteinprecursor), MalS (E. coli, Alpha-amylase precursor), HisJ (E. coli,Histidine-binding periplasmic protein precursor), XylF (E. coli,D-Xylose-binding periplasmic protein precursor), FecB (E. coli,dicitrate-binding periplasmic protein precursor), OmpA (E. coli, outermembrane protein A precursor) and PhoA (E. coli, Alkaline phosphataseprecursor) can be used.

In a preferred embodiment, the signal sequence is selected from the E.coli signal peptides LamB (Maltoporin precursor), MalE (Maltose-bindingprotein precursor), Bla (Beta-lactamase), OppA (Periplasmicoligopeptide-binding protein), TreA (periplasmic trehalase precursor),MppA (Periplasmic murein peptide-binding protein precursor), BglX(Periplasmic beta-glucosidase precursor), ArgT(Lysine-arginine-ornithine binding periplasmic protein precursor), MalS(Alpha-amylase precursor), HisJ (Histidine-binding periplasmic proteinprecursor), XylF (D-Xylose-binding periplasmic protein precursor), FecB(dicitrate-binding periplasmic protein precursor), OmpA (outer membraneprotein A precursor) and PhoA (Alkaline phosphatase precursor). Theseare particularly useful for heterologous expression in E. coli. Morepreferred are the E. Coli signal peptides LamB (Maltoporin precursor),MalE (Maltose-binding protein precursor), Bla (Beta-lactamase), TreA(periplasmic trehalase precursor), ArgT (Lysine-arginine-ornithinebinding periplasmic protein precursor), FecB (dicitrate-bindingperiplasmic protein precursor). Most particular preferred are the E.coli signal peptides LamB (Maltoporin precursor) and MalE(Maltose-binding protein precursor). In case a dicistronic orpolycistronic transcriptional unit is used, different or identicalsignal sequences operably linked to each of the cistrons can be applied.Preferably different signal sequences are used in such a case. Thesignal sequences to be employed in the expression vectors of the presentinvention can be obtained commercially or synthesized chemically. Forexample, signal sequences can be synthesized according to the solidphase phosphoramidite triester method described, e.g., in Beaucage &Caruthers, Tetrahedron Letts. 22:1859-1862 (1981), using an automatedsynthesizer, as described in Van Devanter et. al., Nucleic Acids Res.12:6159-6168 (1984). Purification of oligonucleotides can be performedby either native acrylamide gel electrophoresis or by anion-exchangeHPLC as described in Pearson & Reanier, J. Chrom. 255:137-149 (1983).

The transcriptional unit according to the present invention usuallyfurther comprises a translation initiation region upstream of theinitiation point of the translation of said transcriptional unit, saidtranslation initiation region consisting of the sequence AGGAGATATACAT(SEQ ID NO. 2), whereas said translation initiation region is operablylinked to said nucleic acid sequence. The sequence AGGAGATATACAT (SEQ IDNO. 2) is usually located upstream directly adjacent to the initiationpoint of the translation of the transcriptional unit which can be ATG,GTG or TTG.

Usually, said transcriptional unit further comprises a transcriptiontermination region selected from rrnB, RNA I, T7Te, rrnB T1, trp a L126,trp a, tR2, T3Te, P14, tonB t, and trp a L153. Preferably, the rrnBtranscriptional terminator sequence is used.

The heterologous nucleic acid sequence according to the presentinvention encodes an expression product that is foreign to the host. Incase the host is a prokaryotic species such as E. coli the nucleic acidsequence of interest is more preferably from another class like thegammaproteobacteria such as from e.g. Burkholderia sp., in particularfrom a different phylum such as archae bacteria, and most particularfrom an eukaryotic organism such as mammals in particular from humans.However, the heterologous nucleic acid sequence might be modifiedaccording to the “codon usage” of the host. The heterologous sequenceaccording to the present invention is usually a gene of interest. Thegene of interest preferably encodes a heterologous polypeptide such as astructural, regulatory or therapeutic protein, or N— or C-terminalfusions of structural, regulatory or therapeutic protein with otherproteins (“Tags”) such as green fluorescent protein or other fusionproteins. The heterologous nucleic acid sequence might encode as well atranscript which can be used in the form of RNA, such as e. g.antisense-RNA.

The protein may be produced as an insoluble aggregate or as a solubleprotein which is present in the cytoplasm or in the periplasmic space ofthe host cell, and/or in the extracellular medium. Preferably, theprotein is produced as a soluble protein which is present in theperiplasmic space of the host cell and/or in the extracellular medium.Examples of proteins include hormones such as growth hormone, growthfactors such as epidermal growth factor, analgesic substances likeenkephalin, enzymes like chymotrypsin, antibodies, receptors to hormonesand includes as well proteins usually used as a visualizing marker e.g.green fluorescent protein.

Other proteins of interest are growth factor receptors (e.g., FGFR,PDGFR, EFG, NGFR, and VEGF) and their ligands. Other proteins areG-protein receptors and include substance K receptor, the angiotensinreceptor, the [alpha]- and [beta]-adrenergic receptors, the serotoninreceptors, and PAF receptor (see, e.g. Gilman, Ann. Rev. Biochem. 56,625-649 (1987). Other proteins include ion channels (e.g., calcium,sodium, potassium channels), muscarinic receptors, acetylcholinereceptors, GABA receptors, glutamate receptors, and dopamine receptors(see Harpold, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,401,629 and 5,436,128). Other proteins ofinterest are adhesion proteins such as integrins, selecting, andimmunoglobulin superfamily members (see Springer, Nature 346, 425-433(1990). Osborn, Cell 62, 3 (1990); Hynes, Cell 69, 11 (1992)). Otherproteins are cytokines, such as interleukins IL-1 through IL-13, tumornecrosis factors [alpha] and [beta], interferons [alpha], [beta], and[gamma], tumor growth factor Beta (TGF-[beta]), colony stimulatingfactor (CSF) and granulocyte monocyte colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF)(see Human Cytokines: Handbook for Basic & Clinical Research. Aggrawalet al. eds., Blackwell Scientific, Boston, Mass. 1991). Other proteinsof interest are intracellular and intercellular messengers, such as,adenyl cyclase, guanyl cyclase, and phospholipase C. Drugs are alsoproteins of interest. The heterologous protein of interest can be ofhuman, mammalian or prokaryotic origin. Other proteins are antigens,such as glycoproteins and carbohydrates from microbial pathogens, bothviral and bacterial, and tumors. Other proteins are enzymes likechymosin, proteases, polymerases, dehydrogenases, nucleases, glucanases,oxidases, α-amylase, oxidoreductases, lipases, amidases, nitrilhydratases, esterases or nitrilases.

Preferably, the heterologous nucleic acid sequence, according to thepresent invention, encodes a polypeptide, more preferably an antibodyand most preferably a Fab fragment. In particular a human antibody or ahumanised antibody, more particularly a human Fab fragment is encoded bythe nucleic acid sequence. The human Fab fragment encoded by the nucleicacid sequence is preferably either a human antibody fragment or a humanantibody fragment that was grafted with at least one CDR from anothermammalian species.

In one more preferred embodiment, the human Fab fragment is a fullyhuman HuCAL-Fab as obtainable from an artificial,consensus-framework-based human antibody phage library that wasartifically randomized in the CDR as described by Knappik et al., 2000,J. Mol. Biol. 296 (1), 57-86.

In another more preferred optional embodiment, the, optionally chimeric,CDR grafted, human Fab fragment is a non-HuCAL-Fab as opposed to theHuCAL-Fab definition in the foregoing, which in case of a fully humanFab fragment preferably means that it does not share the HuCAL consensussequence framework but its non-CDR sequence portions are at least 70%more preferably 85%, most preferably 95% identical in amino acidsequence to the respective variable and constant light and heavy chainsgermline-encoded sequences, additionally and more preferably that itsCDRs are directly obtained from naturally occurring genomic sequences oflymphoid cells including genomic affinity maturation events.

The Fab fragment is preferably derived from an IgG antibody and does notcontain cysteine residues that form the two interchain disulfide bondsbetween the two heavy chains in the intact immunoglobulin. Inparticular, the heavy and the light chain of the antibody or preferablyof the Fab fragment are encoded by a dicistronic transcriptional unit,whereas each chain is operably linked to a prokaryotic signal sequenceselected from signal peptides of periplasmatic binding proteins forsugars, amino acids, vitamins and ions and an identical translationinitiation region upstream of the initiation point of the translation ofthe transcriptional unit. Preferably, the translation initiation regionconsists of the sequence AGGAGATATACAT (SEQ ID NO. 2).

In the present invention, the order and the distance in which the signalsequence and the heterologous nucleic acid sequence are arranged withinthe expression vectors can be varied. In preferred embodiments, thesignal sequence is 5′ (upstream) to the nucleic acid sequence encodinge. g. the polypeptide of interest. The signal peptide sequence and thenucleic acid sequence encoding e. g. the polypeptide of interest can beseparated by zero to about 1000 amino acids. In preferred embodiments,the signal peptide sequence and nucleic acid sequence encoding e. g. thepolypeptide of interest are directly adjacent to each other, i.e.separated by zero nucleic acids.

Preferably, the rhaBAD promoter region and the operably linkedtranscriptional unit of the vector of the present invention consists ofthe sequence SEQ ID NO. 3, a sequence complementary thereof and variantsthereof.

More preferably, the rhaBAD promoter region and the operably linkedtranscriptional unit of the vector of the present invention consist ofthe sequence SEQ ID NO. 4, a sequence complementary thereof and variantsthereof.

Also encompassed by the present invention is the use of a vectoraccording to the invention for the regulated heterologous expression ofa nucleic acid sequence in a prokaryotic host. The expression can beregulated by the amount of L-rhamnose available to the prokaryotic host.Usually, the amount of L-rhamnose in the medium of the culturedprokaryotic host is between 0.01 and 100 g/l, preferably between 0.1 and10 g/l, more preferably between 1 and 5 g/l.

Preferably, the heterologous nucleic acid sequence encodes for apolypeptide, more preferably for an antibody and most preferably for aFab fragment, whereas the heavy and light chains of the antibody or theFab fragment are expressed in equal amounts, thus leading to highconcentrations of functional antibody or Fab fragment. In particular ahuman antibody or a humanised antibody more particular a human Fabfragment, most particular a human Fab fragment as described above isencoded by the heterologous nucleic acid sequence.

In order to obtain high concentrations of functional antibody or Fabfragment it is essential to have an equal amount of the heavy and lightchains being expressed. In case one of both chains is overproducedcompared to the other chain, non-reducible high molecular weightimmunoreactive aggregates can be built, which is undesirably. It hasbeen surprisingly found that with the vectors of the present inventionhigh titers of functional antibodies can be obtained whereas only verylow amounts of overproduced light or heavy chain or high molecularweight immunoreactive aggregates are built. Usually, less than 20%,preferably less than 10% of the expressed amount of antibody or Fabfragment are expressed as overproduced light or heavy chain or highmolecular weight immunoreactive aggregates. The amount of the heavy andlight chains overproduced and of high molecular weight immunoreactiveaggregates can be measured by analysing extracts of the host expressingthe antibody or the Fab fragment such as lysozyme extracts of thecultured host cell using SDS-PAGE or Western blot.

In still another aspect, the invention provides an isolated and purifiednucleic acid sequence expressible in a host comprising the rhaBADpromoter region of the L-rhamnose operon operably linked to atranscriptional unit comprising

-   a) a nucleic acid sequence which is heterologous to said host-   b) a prokaryotic signal sequence operably linked to said nucleic    acid sequence, whereas said prokaryotic signal sequence is selected    from signal peptides of periplasmatic binding proteins for sugars,    amino acids, vitamins and ions and, whereas the expression of said    nucleic acid sequence is controlled by said promoter region. The    rhaBAD promoter is the preferred promoter region. More preferred,    the isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence consists of SEQ ID    NO. 1, a sequence complementary thereof and variants thereof, in    particular the isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence consists    of SEQ ID NO. 3, a sequence complementary thereof and variants    thereof, most particular the isolated and purified nucleic acid    sequence consists of SEQ ID NO. 4, a sequence complementary thereof    and variants thereof.

The isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence of this invention can beisolated according to standard PCR protocols and methods well known inthe art. Said purified and isolated DNA sequence can further compriseone or more regulatory sequences, as known in the art e.g. an enhancer,usually employed for the expression of the product encoded by thenucleic acid sequence.

In order to select host cells successfully and stably transformed withthe vector or the isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence of thepresent invention, a gene that encodes a selectable marker (e. g.,resistance to antibiotics) can be introduced into the host cells alongwith the nucleic acid sequence of interest. The gene that encodes aselectable marker might be located on the vector or on the isolated andpurified nucleic acid sequence or might optionally be co-introduced inseparate form e.g. on a separate vector. Various selectable markers canbe used including those that confer resistance to antibiotics, such ashygromycin, ampicillin and tetracyclin. The amount of the antibiotic canbe adapted as desired in order to create selective conditions. Usually,one selectable marker is used. As well reporter genes such asfluorescent proteins can be introduced into the host cells along withthe nucleic acid sequence of interest, in order to determine theefficiency of transformation.

Another aspect of the present invention is to provide a prokaryotic hosttransformed with a vector of the present invention. In a particularembodiment of the invention the prokaryotic host is transformed withplasmid pBW22-Fab-H or plasmid pAKL14, preferably with plasmid pAKL14comprising two different coding regions in its dicistronic expressioncassette for expressing a secreted, heterodimeric protein in such hostcell such as e.g. a Fab. Preferably such heterodimeric protein is a Fab.In another embodiment of the invention the prokaryotic host istransformed with the isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence of thepresent invention.

A wide variety of prokaryotic host cells can be used for theheterologous expression of the nucleic acid sequences of this invention.These hosts may include strains of Gram-negative cells such as E. coliand Pseudomonas, or Gram postitive cells such as Bacillus andStreptomyces. Preferably, the host cell is a Gram-negative cell, morepreferably an E. coli cell. E. coli which can be used are e. g. thestrains TG1, W3110, DH1, XL1-Blue and Origami, which are commerciallyavailable or can be obtained via the DSMZ (Deutsche Sammlung vonMikroorganismen und Zellkulturen GmbH, Braunschweig, Germany). Mostpreferably, W3110 is used. The host cell might or might not metaboliseL-rhamnose. A host cell which is ordinarily capable to uptake andmetabolise L-rhamnose like E. coli might be modified to be deficient inone or more functions related to the uptake and/or metabolism ofL-rhamnose. Deficiency in one or more functions related to the uptakeand/or metabolism of L-rhamnose can be achieved by e.g. suppressing orblocking the expression of a gene coding for a protein related to theuptake and/or metabolism of L-rhamnose such as the gene rhaB coding forL-rhamnulose kinase. This can be done by known techniques such astransposon supported mutagenesis or knock-out mutation. Usually, theprokaryotic host corresponds to the signal sequences chosen, e. g. incase signal sequences of E. coli are used, the host cell is usually amember of the same family of the enterobacteriaceae, more preferably thehost cell is an E. coli strain.

Further provided with the present invention is a method for producing apolypeptide in a host cell, comprising the steps of

-   a) constructing a vector,-   b) transforming a prokaryotic host with said vector,-   c) allowing expression of said polypetide in a cell culture system    under suitable conditions,-   d) recovering said polypeptide from the cell culture system.

The vector used, as well as its construction and the transformation of aprokaryotic host are as defined above, whereas the heterologous nucleicacid sequence comprised by the vector encodes a polypeptide. Preferably,the polypeptide produced is an antibody and most preferably a Fabfragment, whereas the heavy and light chains of the antibody or the Fabfragment are expressed in the cell culture system in equal amounts, thusleading to high concentrations of functional antibody or Fab fragment.

As cell culture system continuous or discontinous culture such as batchculture or fed batch culture can be applied in culture tubes, shakeflasks or bacterial fermentors. Host cells are usually cultured inconventional media as known in the art such as complex media like“nutrient yeast broth medium” or a glycerol containing medium asdescribed by Kortz et al., 1995, J. Biotechnol. 39, 59-65 or a mineralsalt media as described by Kulla et al., 1983, Arch. Microbiol, 135, 1.The preferred medium for carrying out the expression of said polypeptideis a glycerol containing medium, more preferably the medium described byKortz et al., 1995, J. Biotechnol. 39, 59-65.

The medium might be modified as appropriate e.g. by adding furtheringredients such as buffers, salts, vitamins or amino acids. As welldifferent media or combinations of media can be used during theculturing of the cells. Preferably, the medium used as basic mediumshould not include L-rhamnose, in order to achieve a tight regulation ofthe L-rhamnose promoter region. L-rhamnose is usually added after theculture has reached an appropriate OD₆₀₀ depending on the culturesystem. Usually, the amount of L-rhamnose in the medium of the culturedprokaryotic host is between 0.01 and 100 g/l, preferably between 0.1 and10 g/l, more preferably 1 and 5 g/l. For batch culture the usual OD₆₀₀is usually 0.4 or higher. Appropriate pH ranges are e. g. 6-8 preferably7-7.5, appropriate culture temperatures are between 10 and 40,preferably between 20 and 37° C. The cells are incubated usually as longas it takes until the maximum amount of expressed product hasaccumulated, preferably between 1 hour and 20 days, more preferablybetween 5 hours and 3 days. The amount of expressed product depends onthe culture system used. In shake flask culture usually expressedproduct in the amount of 0.5 g/l culture medium can be produced with ahost transformed with the vector of the present invention. Using afermentor culture in a batch and/or fed-batch mode expressed product inthe amount of usually more than 0.5 g/l fermentation broth, preferablymore than 1 g/l, more preferably more than 1.3 g/l can be obtained.

Following expression in the host cell, the expressed product such as thepolypeptide of interest can then be recovered from the culture of hostcells. When the polypeptide of interest are immunoglobulin chains, theheavy chain and the light chain are normally each expressed in the hostcell and secreted to the periplasm of the cell. The signal peptidesencoded by the signal sequences in the expression vector are thenprocessed from the immunoglobulin chains. The mature heavy and lightchains are then assembled to form an intact antibody or a Fab fragment.In order to obtain a maximum yield of the expressed product the cellsare usually harvested at the end of the culture and lysed, such aslysing by lysozyme treatment, sonication or French Press. Thus, thepolypeptides are usually first obtained as crude lysate of the hostcells. They can then be purified by standard protein purificationprocedures known in the art which may include differentialprecipitation, molecular sieve chromatography, ion-exchangechromatography, isoelectric focusing, gel electrophoresis, affinity, andimmunoaffinity chromatography. These well known and routinely practicedmethods are described in, e.g., Ausubel et al., supra., and Wu et al.(eds.), Academic Press Inc., N.Y.; Immunochemical Methods In Cell AndMolecular Biology. For example, for purification of recombinantlyproduced immunoglobulins or Fab fragments, they can be purified withimmunoaffinity chromatography by passage through a column containing aresin which has bound thereto target molecules to which the expressedimmunoglobulins can specifically bind.

A further aspect of the present invention is a vector expressible in ahost comprising a promoter region operably linked to a transcriptionalunit comprising

-   a) a nucleic acid sequence which is heterologous to said host-   b) a translation initiation region upstream of the initiation point    of the translation of said transcriptional unit, said translation    initiation region consisting of the sequence AGGAGATATACAT (SEQ ID    NO. 2),

whereas said translation initiation region is operably linked to saidnucleic acid sequence and the expression of said nucleic acid sequenceis controlled by said promoter region. The promoter region might be aninducible or non-inducible promoter region. Usually, an induciblepromoter region of a catabolic operon is used. As inducible promoterregion of a catabolic operon negatively regulated promoter systems suchas the lactose [lac] (Yanisch-Perron et al., 1985, Gene 33, 103-109),and the tryptophan [trp] (Goeddel et al., 1980, Nature (London) 287,411-416) promoters, and the hybrid promoters derived from these two [tacand trc] (Brosius, 1984,Gene 27 :161-172 ; Amann and Brosius, 1985, Gene40,183-190) as well as positively regulated promoter systems such as thearaB promoter inducible by Arabinose (WO 86 04356), the rhamnosepromoter rhaSB inducible by rhamnose (WO 03068956) or the “rhaBADpromoter region of the L-rhamnose operon” of the present invention canbe used. Preferably, positively regulated catabolic operons are used,more preferred is the “rhaBAD promoter region of the L-rhamnose operon”of the present invention. As well functional equivalents of thesepromoters which might be from various prokaryotic organisms might beused. Functional equivalents are in the case of positively regulatedcatabolic operons equivalents which in the presence of inducer showincreased expression activity compared to their activity in the absenceof inducer. The expression activity in the presence of inducer isusually at least two times, preferably at least five times, morepreferably at least ten times higher than in the absence of the inducer.

Usually, the vector further comprises a signal sequence operably linkedto said nucleic acid sequence. The signal sequence can be prokaryotic oreukaryotic. Preferably prokaryotic signal sequences are used. Aprokaryotic signal sequence is preferably selected from signal peptidesof periplasmatic binding proteins for sugars, amino acids, vitamins andions as described above or from other prokaryotic signal sequence knownto the person in the art. More preferably the prokaryotic signalsequence is selected from signal peptides of periplasmatic bindingproteins for sugars, amino acids, vitamins and ions which are describedabove. Usually, the nucleic acid sequence encodes a polypeptide,preferably an antibody, more preferably a Fab fragment as describedabove.

In a particular embodiment, in case the nucleic acid sequence encodes anantibody, preferably a Fab fragment, the heavy and the light chain ofthe antibody, preferably of the Fab fragment are encoded by adicistronic transcriptional unit, whereas each chain is operably linkedto a signal sequence and the translation initiation region consisting ofthe sequence AGGAGATATACAT (SEQ ID NO. 2).

In a further aspect the present invention provides a method forproducing a polypeptide in a host, comprising the steps of:

-   a) constructing a vector,-   b) transforming a prokaryotic host with said vector,-   c) allowing expression of said polypeptide in a cell culture system    under suitable conditions,-   d) recovering said polypeptide from the cell culture system.

Useful vectors and hosts are as described above. The construction of thevector, the transformation of a prokaryotic host and the cell culturecan be conducted as described above, whereas the heterologous nucleicacid sequence comprised by the vector encodes a polypeptide. In case thepolypeptide produced is a Fab fragment, the heavy and light chains ofthe Fab fragment are expressed in said cell culture system in equalamounts.

The present invention also relates to methods and means for theintracellular heterologous expression of nucleic acids encoding e.g.polypeptides in a prokaryotic host. In particular the present inventionrelates to vectors for the intracellular expression of a heterologouspolypeptide in a prokaryotic host, whereby the vector is expressible ina prokaryotic host comprising the rhaBAD promoter region of theL-rhamnose operon operably linked to a transcriptional unit comprising anucleic acid sequence which is heterologous to said host. Since in thisembodiment of the vector of the present invention the nucleic acidsequence is not linked to a prokaryotic signal sequence upontransforming a prokaryotic host cell with the vector and expression ofthe polypeptide encoded by the heterologous nucleic acid the polypeptidewill not be transported from the cytoplasm to non-cytoplasmic locations.Instead the polypeptide will be expressed within the cytoplasm in formof inclusion bodies or in soluble form. Thus upon expression thepolypeptide can be isolated and purified by well-known procedures fromthe cell, in particular from cell extract. The present invention alsoprovides for the use of said vectors for the regulated intracellularexpression of a heterologous nucleic acid sequence in a prokaryotic hostcell; a prokaryotic host or prokaryotic host cell transformed with saidvector; a method for the intracellular production of a heterologouspolypeptide in a prokaryotic host using said vector; and a vector forthe intracellular production of a heterologous polypeptide comprising apromoter region, a heterologous nucleic acid sequence encoding aheterologous polypeptide and a translation initiation region consistingof the sequence AGGAGATATACAT.

In a preferred embodiment of the vector for the intracellular expressionthe rhaBAD promoter consists of the sequence depicted in SEQ ID No. 1, asequence complementary thereof and a variant sequence thereof. It ispreferred that said rhaBAD promoter region and said operably linkedtranscriptional unit consist of the sequence depicted in SEQ ID No. 3 orSEQ ID No. 4, a sequence complementary thereof or a variant sequencethereof. According to the invention it is possible that the vector forintracellular expression comprises a dicistronic transcriptional unit.In another preferred embodiment of the invention the transcriptionalunit of the vector further comprises a translation initiation regionupstream of the initiation point of the translation of saidtranscriptional unit, whereby the translation initiation region consistsof the sequence AGGAGATATACAT (SEQ ID No. 2). In further preferredembodiments the vector for intracellular expression comprises atranscription termination region such as the rrnB transcriptionalterminator sequence. According to the invention the heterologous nucleicacid sequence may encode a polypeptide such as an antibody, an antibodyfragment etc.

Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the invention describedherein is susceptible to variations and modifications other than thosespecifically described. It is to be understood that the inventionincludes all such variations and modifications without departing fromthe spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The invention alsoincludes all of the steps, features, compositions and compounds referredto or indicated in this specification, individually or collectively, andany and all combinations or any two or more of said steps or features.The present disclosure is therefore to be considered as in all aspectsillustrated and not restrictive, the scope of the invention beingindicated by the appended Claims, and all changes which come within themeaning and range of equivalency are intended to be embraced therein.Various references are cited throughout this Specification, each ofwhich is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.

The foregoing description will be more fully understood with referenceto the following Examples. Such Examples, are, however, exemplary ofmethods of practising the present invention and are not intended tolimit the scope of the invention.

EXAMPLES Example 1

Construction of Expression Plasmids with Positively Regulated Promoters

The Escherichia coli W3110 genome was scanned for positively regulatedoperons. Based on the genomic data which are available on the KEGGdatabase (Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes,http://www.genome.ad.jp/kegg/kegg2.html) positively regulated catabolicpromoters were identified and analysed for their use in expressionplasmids. The promoters should be tightly regulated and induced by acheap and non-toxic and therefore industrially useful compound. Thefollowing promoters of different positively regulated catabolic operonswere chosen

-   -   prp promoter (propionate inducible)    -   gutA promoter (glucitol inducible)    -   melAB2 promoter (melibiose inducible)

The precise DNA fragments which contain the promoter elements wereselected based on the available information on the correspondingregulator binding sites. Chromosomal DNA of Escherichia coli wasisolated by the method of Pitcher et al., 1989, Letters in AppliedMicrobiology 8, 151-156. The promoter fragments were amplified from thechromosomal DNA of strain W3110 by PCR using the following primers. Therestriction sites of ClaI and AflII are underlined. The sequences of thefragments are as follows:

Pprp       Pprp-5          5′ aaa atc gat aaa tga aac gca tat ttg 3′           Pprp-3          5′ aaa ctt aag ttg tta tca act tgt tat 3′AAAATCGATAACTGAAACGCATATTTGCGGATTAGTTCATGACTTTATCTCTAACAAATTGAAATTAAACATTTAATTTTATTAAGGCAATTGTGGCACACCCCTTGCTTTGTCTTTATCAACGCAAATAACAAGTTGATAACAACTTAAGTTT PgutA      PgutA-5         5′ aaaatc gat gca tca cgc ccc gca caa 3′            PgutA-3         5′ aaa cttaag tca gga ttt att gtt tta 3′AAAATCGATGCATCACGCCCCGCACAAGGAAGCGGTAGTCACTGCCCGATACGGACTTTACATAACTCAACTCATTCCCCTCGCTATCCTTTTATTCAAACTTTCAAATTAAAATATTTATCTTTCATTTTGCGATCAAAATAACACTTTTAAATCTTTCAATCTGATTAGATTAGGTTGCCGTTTGGTAATAAAACAATAAATCCTGACTTAAGTTT PmelAB2    PmelAB-5-1      5′aaa atc gat gac tgc gag tgg gag cac 3′            PmelAB-3        5′ aaactt aag ggc ttg ctt gaa taa ctt 3′          MeIR                                  CRP

GATTCGCCTGCCATGATGAAGTTATTCAAGCAAGCCCTTAAGTTT                      +1

(Binding site for CRP 2 is highlighted in light grey and binding sitesfor MelR are highlighted in black)

The fragments were separated by agarose gelelectrophoresis and isolatedby the gelextraction kit QiaexII from Qiagen (Hilden, Germany). Theisolated fragments were cut with ClaI and AflII and ligated toClaI/AflII-cut pBW22 (Wilms et al., 2001, Biotechnology andBioengineering, 73 (2), 95-103). The resulting plasmids containing theprp promoter (pBLL5), the gutA promoter (pBLL6) and the melAB2 promoter(pBLL7) are identical except for the promoter region ligated. Thesequence of the inserted promoter fragments were confirmed by sequencing(Microsynth GmbH, Balgach, Switzerland).

Example 2

Construction of Fab Fragment Expression Plasmids

As an alternative to an IPTG-inducible lac promoter (plasmidpMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H, Knappik et al., 1985, Gene 33, 103-119), differentpositively regulated expression systems were analysed for their capacityto produce Fab-H antibody fragments. The Fab-H fragment was amplifiedout of plasmid pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H by PCR using the primers Fab-5 (5′-aaacat atg aaa aag aca gct atc-3′) and Fab-3 (5′-aaa aag ctt tta tca gctttt cgg ttc-3′). The PCR-fragment was cut with NdeI and HindIII andinserted into NdeI/HindIII-cut pBW22 (Volff et al., 1996, Mol.Microbiol. 21, 1037-1047) to create plasmid pBW22-Fab-H (FIG. 1)containing the rhamnose inducible rhaBAD promoter (SEQ ID NO. 1). Thesame PCR-fragment was inserted into the different expression plasmidswith inducible promoters. The resulting Fab-H containing (putative)expression plasmids are pBLL13 containing the prp promoter, pBLL14containing the gutA promoter and pBLL15 containing the melAB2 promoter(FIG. 2). The sequence of the Fab-H insert of plasmid pBW22-Fab-H wasconfirmed by sequencing.

Example 3

Expression of Fab Fragment

Strain W3110 (DSM 5911, Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen undZellkulturen GmbH, Braunschweig, Germany) was transformed with thedifferent expression plasmids. The plasmids were isolated from cloneswhich resulted from the different transformations and checked viarestriction analysis. Except plasmid pBLL14 all plasmids had theexpected restriction pattern. The re-isolated plasmid pBLL14 showed analtered size and restriction pattern which was suggested to be due torecombination events. Therefore strain W3110 (pBLL14) was not tested inthe following assays. The remaining strains were tested for theirability to secrete actively folded Fab-H antibody fragments. Thisproductivity test was performed as described in example 4. The followinginducers were added in a concentration of 0.2%

pBW22-Fab-H L(+)-Rhamnose monohydrate pBLL13 Sodium propionate pBLL15D(+)-Melibiose monohydrate D(+)-Raffinose monohydrate D(+)-Galactose

The results from the dot blot experiments are shown in FIG. 3.

The rhamnose- and melibiose-induced strains W3110 (pBW22-Fab-H) andW3110 (pBLL15) showed promising dot blot results: increasing signalsover time and almost no background activity. The portion of activelyfolded antibody fragments was quantified via ELISA. The results aresummarized in the following Table 1.

TABLE 1 ELISA results of the W3110 derivatives with the differentexpression plasmids. The time after induction is indicated. Theuninduced cultures after 22 or 25 h were measured as uninduced controlsand the results from strain W3110 (pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H) andTG1F′-(pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H) are used as references. The Fab-H concentrationis given in mg/100 OD₆₀₀/L (n.d. not determined) 8 h 11.5/12 h 22/25 h22/25 h Plasmid Inducer induced uninduced in TG1F′- pMx9-HuCAL- IPTG ndNd 68.64 84.56 Fab-H in W3110 pMx9-HuCAL- IPTG nd Nd 140.56 8.14 Fab-HpBW22-Fab-H Rhamnose 176.88 259.56 328.62 6.52 pBLL13 Propionate nd 0.840.90 3.94 pBLL15 Melibiose 2.89 145.10 504.28 4.28

All strains grew well without any growth inhibition in the presence orabsence of the corresponding inducer up to OD₆₀₀ between 4 and 6. Theexpression plasmids pBW22-Fab-H (containing SEQ ID NO. 3) and pBLL15 ledto the highest antibody fragment titers after overnight induction. Themelibiose induced strain W3110 (pBLL15) showed a delayed increase in theformation of active antibody fragments compared to the rhamnose(pBW22-Fab-H) induced system.

The rhamnose inducible strain W3110 (pBW22-Fab-H) was tested in theRespiration Activity Monitoring System (RAMOS, ACBiotec, Jülich,Germany), a novel measuring system for the on-line determination ofrespiration activities in shake flasks. In comparison to the normalshake flask experiment the antibody titer (which was measured via ELISA)doubled (703.64 mg/L/100 OD₆₀₀ after 23 h of induction). The optimisedgrowth using the RAMOS equipment favours the production of activeantibody fragments.

Example 4

Melibiose Induction in Shake Flasks

E. coli W3110 carrying plasmid pBLL15 was tested for its capacity toproduce actively folded Fab-H antibody fragments. Overnight cultures [inNYB medium (10 g/l tryptone, 5 g/l yeast extract, 5 g/l sodium chloride)supplemented with 100 μg/ml of Ampicillin, 37° C.] were diluted (1:50)in 20 ml of fresh glycerol medium (as described by Kortz et al., 1995,J. Biotechnol. 39, 59-65, whereas the vitamin solution was used asdescribed by Kulla et al., 1983, Arch. Microbiol, 135, 1 and incubatedat 30° C. Melibose (0.2%) was added when the cultures reached an OD₆₀₀of about 0.4. Samples (1 ml) were taken at different time intervals,centrifuged and the pellets were stored at −20° C. The frozen cells werelysed according to the above described lysozyme treatment and thesupernatants were analysed in dot blot and ELISA assays. 504,28 mg/L/100OD₆₀₀ of functional Fab-H antibody fragments were obtained.

Example 5

Occurence of High Molecular Weight Aggregates

In order to find out if high molecular weight aggregates are produced,western blot of extracts of strain W3110 (pBLL15), which showed thehighest antibody titer (Table 1), was conducted using the anti-humanFab-H+AP conjugate. The culture was performed as described in example 4.Samples were taken after 9, 12 and 23 hours after induction withmelibiose. Lower concentrations of high molecular weight aggregatescorrespond to higher titers of functional antibody fragments. The choiceof the expression system seems to influence the way in which theantibody fragments are formed: functional or in aggregates.

Example 6

Influence of Signal Peptides

The genome database of E. coli was used to look for useful signalpeptides that could be used in combination with the Fab-H fragmentsVL3-CL and VH-CH. The signal sequences from periplasmic binding proteinsfor sugars, amino acids, vitamins and ions were chosen. Theseperiplasmic proteins represent a relatively homogeneous group that havebeen more extensively studied than other periplasmic proteins. Sincethey are generally abundant their signal sequences have to ensure anefficient transport over the inner membrane into the periplasm. Allpossible signal peptide Fab combinations were checked for their sequencepeptide and cleavage site probability using the SignalP web server(http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/SignalP-2.0/#submission) as shown in thefollowing Table 2.

Signal peptide Signal Max peptide Cleavage proba- proba- bility bilityOmpA (E. coli) - Outer membrane protein a precursor MKKTA IAIAV ALAGFATVAQ A APKDN (OmpA) 1.000 0.993 MKKTA IAIAV ALAGF ATVAQ A DIELT(OmpA-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 1.000 0.971 PhoA (E. coli) - Alkaline phosphataseprecursor VKQST IALAL LPLLF TPVTK A RTPEM (PhoA) 0.996 0.765 MKQST IALALLPLLF TPVTK A QVQLK (PhoA-VH-CH, Fab-H) 0.999 0.784 PelB (Erwiniachrysantemi) - Pectate lyase precursor MKSLI TPITA GLLLA LSQPL LA ATDTG(PelB) 1.000 0.999 MKSLI TPITA GLLLA LSQPL LA DIELT (PelB-VL3-CL, Fab-H)1.000 0.998 MKSLI TPITA GLLLA LSQPL LA QVQLK (PelB-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.0000.998 PelB (Erwinia carotovora) - Pectate lyase precursor MKYLL PTAAAGLLLL AAQPA MA ANTGG (PelB) 1.000 1.000 MKYLL PTAAA GLLLL AAQPA MA DIELT(PelB-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 1.000 1.000 MKYLL PTAAA GLLLL AAQPA MA QVQLK(PelB-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.000 1.000 PelB (Xanthomonas campestris) - Pectatelyase precursor MKPKF STAAA ASLFV GSLLV IGVAS A DPALE (PelB) 1.000 0.993MKPKF STAAA ASLFV GSLLV IGVAS A DIELT (PelB-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 1.000 0.985MKPKF STAAA ASLFV GSLLV IGVAS A QVQLK (PelB-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.000 0.988LamB (E. coli) - Maltoporin precursor (Lambda receptor protein) MMITLRKLPL AVAVA AGVMS AQAMA VDFHG (LamB) 1.000 0.975 MMITL RKLPL AVAVA AGVMSAQAMA DIELT (LamB-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 1.000 0.979 MMITL RKLPL AVAVA AGVMSAQAMA QVQLK (LamB-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.000 0.988 MalE (E. coli) -Maltose-binding protein precursor MKIKT GARIL ALSAL TTMMF SASAL A KIEEG(MalE) 1.000 0.956 MKIKT GARIL ALSAL TTMMF SASAL A DIELT (MalE-VL3-CL,Fab-H) 1.000 0.978 MKIKT GARIL ALSAL TTMMF SASAL A QVQLK (MalE-VH-CH,Fab-H) 1.000 0.990 Bla (pBR322) (E. coli) - Beta-lactamase MSIQH FRVALIPFFA AFCLP VFA HPETL (Bla) 1.000 1.000 MSIQH FRVAL IPFFA AFCLP VFADIELT (Bla-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 1.000 1.000 MSIQH FRVAL IPFFA AFCLP VFA QVQLK(Bla-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.000 0.999 OppA (E. coli) - Periplasmicoligopeptide-binding protein MTNIT KRSLV AAGVL AALMA GNVAL A ADVPA(OppA) 1.000 0.996 MTNIT KRSLV AAGVL AALMA GNVAL A DIELT (OppA-VL3-CL,Fab-H) 1.000 0.911 MTNIT KRSLV AAGVL AALMA GNVAL A QVQLK (OppA-VH-CH,Fab-H) 1.000 0.984 TreA (E. coli) - Periplasmic trehalase precursor(Alpha-trehalose glucohydrolase MKSPA PSRPQ KMALI PACIF LCFAA LSVQAEETPV (TreA) 1.000 0.996 MKSPA PSRPQ KMALI PACIF LCFAA LSVQA DIELT(TreA-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 1.000 0.961 MKSPA PSRPQ KMALI PACIF LCFAA LSVQAQVQLK (TreA-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.000 0.989 MppA (E. coli) - Periplasmicmurein peptide-binding protein precursor MKHSV SVTCC ALLVS SISLS YAAEVPS (MppA) 1.000 0.943 MKHSV SVTCC ALLVS SISLS YA DIELT (MppA-VL3-CL,Fab-H) 1.000 0.906 MKHSV SVTCC ALLVS SISLS YA QVQLK (MppA-VH-CH, Fab-H)1.000 0.938 BglX (E. coli) - Periplasmic beta-glucosidase precursorMKWLC SVGIA VSLAL QPALA DDLFG (BglX) 1.000 0.999 MKWLC SVGIA VSLAL QPALADIELT (BglX-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 0.999 0.999 MKWLC SVGIA VSLAL QPALA QVQLK(BglX-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.000 0.996 ArgT (E. coli) -Lysine-arginine-ornithine-binding periplasmic protein precursor MKKSILALSL LVGLS TAASS YA ALPET 1.000 0.929 MKKSI LALSL LVGLS TAASS YA DIELT(ArgT-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 1.000 0.947 MKKSI LALSL LVGLS TAASS YA QVQLK(ArgT-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.000 0.960 MalS (E. coli) - Alpha-amylase precursorMKLAA CFLTL LPGFA VA ASWTS (MalS) 1.000 0.794 MKLAA CFLTL LPGFA VA DIELT(MalS-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 0.998 0.995 MKLAA CFLTL LPGFA VA QVQLK (MalS-VH-CH,Fab-H) 1.000 0.990 HisJ (E. coli) - Histidine-binding periplasmicprotein precursor MKKLV LSLSL VLAFS SATAA FA AIPQN (HisJ) 1.000 0.994MKKLV LSLSL VLAFS SATAA FA DIELT (HisJ-VL3-CL, Fab-H) 1.000 0.957 MKKLVLSLSL VLAFS SATAA FA QVQLK (HisJ-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.000 0.988 XylF (E.coli) - D-Xylose-binding periplasmic protein precursor MKIKN ILLTL CTSLLLTNVA AHA KEVKI (XylF) 1.000 0.996 MKIKN ILLTL CTSLL LTNVA AHA DIELT(XylF-VL3-CL, FabH) 1.000 0.992 MKIKN ILLTL CTSLL LTNVA AHA QVQLK(XylF-VH-CH, Fab-H) 1.000 0.996 FecB (E. coli) - Iron(III)dicitrate-binding periplasmic protein precursor MLAFI RFLFA GLLLV ISHAFA ATVQD (FecB) 1.000 0.975 MLAFI RFLFA GLLLV ISHAF A DIELT (FecB-VL3-CL,Fab-H) 1.000 0.989 MLAFI RFLFA GLLLV ISHAF A QVQLK (FecB-VH-CH, Fab-H)1.000 0.990

The following six combinations were chosen:

-   -   LamB-VL3-CL (Maltoporin precursor)    -   MalE-VH-CH (Maltose-binding protein precursor)    -   Bla-VL3-CL (Beta-lactamase)    -   TreA-VH-CH (Periplasmic trehalase precursor)    -   ArgT-VL3-CL (Lysine-arginine-ornithine-binding periplasmic        protein precursor)    -   FecB-VH-CH (Iron (III) dicitrate-binding periplasmic protein        precursor

The gene fusions to generate signal peptide (SP) to VL3-CL and VH-CHfusions were carried out with overlapping PCR primers and are summarizedin the following amplification Table 3

Primer Template Fragment LamB-VL3-CL lamB-5 Genomic DNA of E. colilamB-SP lamB-3 W3110 lamB-VL3-5 pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H-S-S VL3-CL VL3-3 lamB-5lamB-SP/VL3-CL lamB-VL3-CL VL3-3 MalE-VH-CH malE-5 Genomic DNA of E.coli malE-SP malE-3 W3110 malE-VH-CH pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H VH-CH VH-3 malE-5malE-SP/VH-CH malE-VH-CH VL3-3 Bla-VL3-CL bla-5 Genomic DNA of E. colibla-SP bla-3 W3110 bla-VL3-5 pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H-S-S VL3-CL VL3-3 bla-5bla-SP/VL3-CL bla-VL3-CL VL3-3 TreA-VH-CH treA-5 Genomic DNA of E. colitreA-SP treA-3 W3110 treA-VH-CH pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H-S-S VH-CH VH-3 treA-5treA-SP/VH-CH treA-VH-CH VH-3 ArgT-VL3-CL argT-5 Genomic DNA of E. coliargT-SP argT-3 W3110 argT-VL3-5 pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H VL3-CL VL3-3 argT-5argT-SP/VL3-CL argT-VL3-CL VL3-3 FecB-VH-CH fecB-5 Genomic DNA of E.coli fecB-SP fecB-3 W3110 fecB-VH-CH pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H-S-S VH-CH VL3-3fecB-5 fecB-SP/VH-CH fecB-VH-CH VL3-3

The fusions of the signal peptide sequences with the VL3-CL and VH-CHsequences were performed as described elsewhere (Horton, R. M., Hunt, H.D., Ho, S. N., Pullen, J. K. and Pease, L. R. (1989) Engineering hybridgenes without the use of restriction enzymes: gene splicing by overlapextension. Gene 77, 61-68). The SP-VL3-CL genes were cut withrestriction enzymes NdeI and PstI and ligated into NdeI/PstI cut pBW22and into pBLL7. The resulting plasmids were cut with PstI and HindIIIand ligated to PstI/HindIII cut SP-VH-CH genes. Since the integration ofthe bla-VL3-CL and fecB-VH-CH genes was not possible only the Fab-Hexpression plasmid containing the lamB-VL3-CL and malE-VH-CH genes couldbe tested. A lamB-VL3-CL/malE-VH-CH expression plasmid containing therhamnose inducible promoter (pAKL14) was obtained. ThelamB-VL3-CL/malE-VH-CH genes which were isolated from plasmid pAKL15(example 7) as AflII/HindIII fragment were ligated intoAflII/HindIII-cut pBLL7 to obtain pAKL15E. FIGS. 4 and 8 illustrate thelamB-VL3-CL/malE-VH-CH expression plasmids pAKL14 and pAKL15E.

Example 7

Influence of Translation Initiation Regions on Fab Expression

The Fab-H genes of plasmid pAKL14 (containing SEQ ID NO. 4) and plasmidpAKL15E contain the same DNA sequence 5′ of the start codon (translationinitiation region) whereas in the original plasmid pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H thetranslation initiation regions of both Fab-H genes are different. Acomparison of the translation initiation regions sequences of plasmidpMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H and pAKL14/pAKL15E is shown in the following Table 4:

pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H ompA-VL3-CL gagggcaaaaa atg phoA-VH-CH aggagaaaataaaatg pAKL14/pAKL15E lamB-VL3-CL aggagatatacat atg malE-VH-CHaggagatatacat atg

The productivity of strain W3110 (pAKL14) was tested in shake flasks asdescribed in example 4. The strain grew well in the presence or absenceof L-rhamnose. That means the production of Fab-H did not influence theviability of the cells. As shown in FIG. 5 the dot blot results lookedpromising.

To analyse the presence of non-reducible high molecular weightaggregates a Western blot was performed (FIG. 6). Although highmolecular weight aggregates appear after an induction time of 5 hourstheir amount only slightly increases after 23 h. The non-induced cultureshows high molecular weight bands which might be due to a weakunspecific background production. The corresponding ELISA values aregiven in the following Table 5 (Fab-H concentration (mg/L/100 OD₆₀₀) inlysozyme extracts of uninduced and rhamnose induced strain W3110(pAKL14)).

5 h 7 h 12 h 23 h 23 h Plasmid Inducer induced uninduced in W3110Rhamnose 29.04 267.48 308.40 596.14 2.84

The new signal peptide constructs (in combination with the modifiedtranslation initiation signals) again increased the antibody fragmenttiter from 328.62 mg/L/100 OD₆₀₀ (plasmid pBW22-Fab-H which contains theMOR gene construct from plasmid pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H) to 596.14 mg/L/100OD₆₀₀ plasmid pAKL14) and to 878.86 mg/L/100 OD₆₀₀ (plasmid pAKL15E).The sequencing of the lamB-VL3-CL and malE-VH-CH genes in pAKL14revealed three base exchanges which are supposed to be due to theconstruction of the fusion genes by two consecutive PCR reactions. Thebase exchanges led to the following amino acid changes (the wrong aminoacids are emphasized):

VL3-CL (pAKL14) − pI = 4.85MMITLRKLPLAVAVAAGVMSAQAMADIELTQPPSVSVAPGQTARISCSG N ALGDKYASWYQQ NPGQAPVLVIYDDSDRPSGIPERFSGSNSGNTATLTISGTQAEDEADYYCQSYDSPQVVFGGGTKLTVLGQPKAAPSVTLFPPSSEELQANKATLVCLISDFYPGAVTVAWKADSSPVKAGVETTTPSKQSNNKYAASSYLSLTPEQWKSHRSYSCQVTHEGSTVEKTVAPTEA VH-CH (pAKL14) − p1 = 9.52MKIKTGARILALSALTTMMFSASALAQVQLKESGPALVKPTQTLTLTCTFSGFSLSTSGVGVGWIRQPPGKALEWLALIDWDDDKYYSTSLKTRLTISKDTSKNQVVLTMTNMDPVDTATYYCARYPVTQRSYMDVWGQGTLVTVSSAST KGPSV LPLAPSSKSTSGGTAALGCLVKDYFPEPVTVSWNSGALTSGVHTFPAVLQSSGLYSLSSVVTVPSSSLGTQTYICNVNHKPSNTKVDKKVEPKS

The light chain of Fab-H carries two mistakes (D50N, K63N) and the heavychain one amino acid exchange (F156L). To restore the original Fab-Hsequence two fragments from plasmid pAKL14 (138 bp SexAI/BamHI and 310bp BssHII/HindIII fragment) were exchanged against the homologousfragments of plasmid pBW22-Fab-H (which carries the unchanged Fab-H genesequence). The resulting plasmid pAKL15 carries the correct Fab-Hsequence. The exchange of the three amino acids had no apparent effecton the overall Fab-H properties since the pI was unchanged. Thereforethe capacity of strain W3110 (pAKL15) to produce functional Fab-Hantibody fragments was supposed to be similar to strain W3110 (pAKL14)and was not analysed.

The Fab-H antibody fragment productivity could be increased by usingdifferent optimisation strategies. The following Table 6 summarizes theimprovements:

Concentration of functional Fab-H Antibody (mg/L/ Activity StrainImprovement 100 OD₆₀₀) increase TG1F′- MOR strain 84.56 (pMx9-HuCAL-Fab-H) W3110 Strain background 140.45 1.7 (pMx9-HuCAL- Fab-H) W3110Expression system 328.62 3.9 (pBW22-Fab-H) (Rhamnose) W3110 (pBLL15)Expression system 504.28 6 (Melibiose) W3110 (pAKL14) Signal peptide596.14 7 Translation (Rhamnose) W3110 (pAKL15E) Signal peptide 878.8610.4 Translation (Melibiose)

Strains which produced high Fab-H antibody titers were analysed viaSDS-PAGE (FIG. 7). The highest functional Fab-H concentrations weremeasured in strains which produce a balanced amount of light and heavychain (lanes 4 and 5). The rhamnose inducible strains which carry theFab-H fragment such as W3110 (pBW22-Fab-H) (lane 3) strongly overproducethe light chain.

Example 8

Melibiose Induction in Shake Flasks

E. coli W3110 carrying plasmid pAKL15E (FIG. 8) was tested for itscapacity to produce actively folded Fab-H antibody fragments. Overnightcultures [in NYB medium (10 g/l tryptone, 5 g/l yeast extract, 5 g/lsodium chloride) supplemented with 100 μg/ml of Ampicillin, 37° C.] werediluted (1:50) in 20 ml of fresh glycerol medium (as described by Kortzet al., 1995, J. Biotechnol. 39, 59-65, whereas the vitamin solution wasused as described by Kulla et al., 1983, Arch. Microbiol, 135, 1 andincubated at 30° C. Melibose (0.2%) was added when the cultures reachedan OD₆₀₀ of about 0.4. Samples (1 ml) were taken at different timeintervals, centrifuged and the pellets were stored at −20° C. The frozencells were lysed according to the above described lysozyme treatment andthe supernatants were analysed in SDS-PAGE and ELISA assays. Themelibiose inducible strain which carry the Fab-H genes with the alteredsignal peptides (lamB-VL3-CL/malE-VH-CH) showed the highest Fab-Hantibody titers (Table 6). The light and heavy chain of Fab-H wereproduced in equal amounts (FIG. 9).

Example 9

Intracellular Production of Antibody Fragments

Origami host strains provide mutations in both the thioredoxin reductase(trxB) and glutathione reductase (gor) genes, enhancing disulfide bondformation and permit protein folding in the bacterial cytoplasm. Toconstruct the VL3-CL and VH-CH genes without signal peptide regions thefollowing primers were used:

5′-VL 5′-aaa cat atg gat atc gaa ctg acc cag-3′ (NdeI restriction site)3′-CL 5′-aaa ctg cag tta tca ggc ctc agt cgg-3′ (PstI restriction site)5′-VH 5′-aaa ctg cag gag ata tac ata tgc agg tgc aat tga a-3′ (PstIrestriction site) 3′-CH 5′-aaa aag ctt tta tea gct ttt cgg ttc-3′(HindIII restriction site)

The corresponding VL3-CL and VH-CH genes were amplified and checked viarestriction analysis. The NdeI/PstI cut VL3-CH fragment was integratedinto NdeI/PstI cut plasmid pBW22. The resulting plasmid was cut withPstI and HindIII and ligated to the PstI/HindIII cut VH-CH fragment toget plasmid pJKL6. The plasmid was transformed into the Origami strainand strain W3110 as a reference. The productivity of the strains W3110(pJKL6) and Origami (pJKL6) was tested in shake flasks as described inexample 4.

To analyse the presence of functional antibody fragments andnon-reducible high molecular weight aggregates a Western blot wasperformed. Both strains hardly produce any functional antibodyfragments. Strain W3110 accumulates high molecular weight aggregateswith increasing induction times (W3110) whereas the Origami strain doesnot produce any antibody fragments. The corresponding ELISA values aregiven in the following Table 7 (Fab-H concentration (mg/L/100 OD₆₀₀) inlysozyme extracts of uninduced and rhamnose induced strains Origami(pJKL6) and W3110 (pJKL6)):

7 h 11 h 24 h 24 h Plasmid Inducer induced uninduced Origami pJKL6Rhamnose 5.24 6.86 10.54 2.60 W3110 pJKL6 Rhamnose 2.73 5.34 5.2 2.83

Example 10

Rhamnose Induction of a Single Chain Antibody (scFv, S1) in Shake Flasks

The scFv gene was isolated via PCR using the primers 5-S (5′-aaa cat atgaaa tac cta ttg cct acg gc-3′) and 3-S1 (5′-aaa aag ctt act acg agg agacgg-3′). The corresponding S1 protein contains a PelB signal sequencewhich is responsible for transport of the protein to the periplasm of E.coli. The PCR-fragment was cut with NdeI and HindIII and inserted intoNdeI/HindIII-cut pBW22 to create plasmid pBW22-pelB-S1 containing therhamnose inducible rhaBAD promoter (FIG. 10). The sequence of the S1insert of plasmid pBW22-pelB-S1 was confirmed by sequencing. StrainW3110 (DSM 5911, Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und ZellkulturenGmbH, Braunschweig, Germany) was transformed with plasmid pBW22-pelB-S1.The plasmids were isolated from different clones and verified byrestriction analysis. E. coli W3110 (pBW22-pelB-S1) was tested for itscapacity to produce soluble S1. Overnight cultures [in NYB medium (10g/l tryptone, 5 g/l yeast extract, 5 g/l sodium chloride) supplementedwith 100 μg/ml of Ampicillin, 37° C.] were diluted (1:50) in 20 ml offresh glycerol medium [as described by Kortz et al., 1995, J.Biotechnol. 39, 59-65, with the exception of the vitamin solution (asdescribed by Kulla et al., 1983, Arch. Microbiol, 135, 1)] and incubatedat 30° C. Rhamnose (0.2%) was added when the cultures reached an OD₆₀₀of about 0.4. Samples (1 ml) were taken at different time intervals,centrifuged and the pellets were stored at −20° C. The frozen cells werelysed according to the above described lysozyme treatment and thesupernatants and insoluble protein pellets were analysed via SDS-PAGE(FIG. 11) and Bioanalyzer. Most of the S1 protein (mg/L/100 OD₆₀₀) wasproduced in the soluble protein fraction.

Example 11

Construction of a Broad-Host-Range Rhamnose Expression Plasmid forPseudomonas and Related Bacteria

The following cloning experiments were performed in Escherichia coliJM109. The broad-host-range cloning vector pBBR1MCS-2 (NCBI accessionnumber U23751) was cut with AgeI/NsiI. The lacZα gene was deleted andreplaced by the oligonucleotides 3802 (5′-tgt taa ctg cag gat cca agctta-3′) and 3803 (5′-ccg gta agc ttg gat cct gca gtt aac atg ca-3′) toget plasmid pJOE4776.1. The rhaRSP fragment was provided by plasmidpJKS408 (unpublished) which contains the genomic rhaRS fragment (2 kb)of Escherichia coli JM109. Plasmid pJKS408 was cut with BamHI/HindIIIand ligated to the BamHI/HindIII cut eGFP fragment (0.7 kb) of plasmidpTST101 [Stumpp, T., Wilms, B., Altenbuchner, J. (2000): Ein neues,L-Rhamnose-induzierbares Expressionssystem für Escherichia coli.Biospectrum 6, 33-36]. The rhaRSPmalE-eGFP fragment (4 kb) was isolatedvia NsiI/HindIII from the resulting plasmid pJOE4030.2 and integratedinto NsiI/HindIII cut pJOE4776.1. Plasmid pJOE4776.1 (FIG. 12) containsthe rhaBAD promoter region in combination with the genes of theregulatory proteins RhaS and RhaR of the rhamnose operon of Escherichiacoli in a broad-host-range plasmid backbone.

Example 12

Rhamnose Induction of a Nitrilase in Shake Flasks

The nitrilase gene was cut with NdeI and BamHI from Plasmid pDC12(Kiziak et al., 2005) and inserted into NdeI/BamHI-cut pJOE4782.1 tocreate plasmid pAKLP2 containing the L-rhamnose inducible rhaBADpromoter (FIG. 13). E. coli XL1-Blue was transformed with plasmid pAKLP2as an intermediate step. The plasmids were isolated from differentclones and verified by restriction analysis. Pseudomonas putida KT-2440(DSM 6125, Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen GmbH,Braunschweig, Germany) was transformed with the isolated plasmid pAKLP2from E. coli XL1blue(pAKLP2). Pseudomonas putida KT-2440 (pAKLP2) wastested for its capacity to produce nitrilase. Overnight cultures [in NYBmedium (10 g/l tryptone, 5 g/l yeast extract, 5 g/l sodium chloride)supplemented with 50 μg/ml of Kanamycin, 30° C.] were diluted in 20 mlof fresh glycerol medium [as described by Kortz et al., 1995, J.Biotechnol. 39, 59-65, with the exception of the vitamin solution (asdescribed by Kulla et al., 1983, Arch. Microbiol, 135, 1)] to an OD₆₀₀of about 0.1 and incubated at 30° C. L-rhamnose (1.0%) was added whenthe cultures reached an OD₆₀₀ of about 0.25. Samples (1 ml) were takenat different time intervals, centrifuged and the pellets were stored at−20° C. The pellets were resuspended in Tris/HCl-buffer (50 mM, pH 8.0)and the cell suspensions were analysed via SDS-PAGE (FIG. 14).

Example 13

L-rhamnose Induction of a Fragment Antibody (FabM) in Shake Flasks

The Fab-M gene was cut with NdeI and BamHI from plasmid pBW22-FabM andinserted into NdeI/BamHI-cut pJOE4782.1 to create plasmid pAKLP1containing the L-rhamnose inducible rhaBAD promoter (FIG. 15). E. coliXL1-Blue was transformed with plasmid pAKLP1 as an intermediate step.The plasmids were isolated from different clones and verified byrestriction analysis. Pseudomonas putida KT-2440 (DSM 6125, DeutscheSammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen GmbH, Braunschweig,Germany) was transformed with the isolated plasmid pAKLP1 from E. coliXL1blue(pAKLP1). Pseudomonas putida KT-2440 (pAKLP1) was tested for itscapacity to produce Fab-M. Overnight cultures [in NYB medium (10 g/ltryptone, 5 g/l yeast extract, 5 g/l sodium chloride) supplemented with50 μg/ml of Kanamycin, 30° C.] were diluted in 20 ml of fresh glycerolmedium [as described by Kortz et al., 1995, J. Biotechnol. 39, 59-65,with the exception of the vitamin solution (as described by Kulla etal., 1983, Arch. Microbiol, 135, 1)] to an OD₆₀₀ of about 0.1 andincubated at 30° C. L-rhamnose (1.0%) was added when the culturesreached an OD₆₀₀ of about 0.25. Samples (1 ml) were taken at differenttime intervals, centrifuged and the pellets were stored at −20° C. Thepellets were resuspended in Tris/HCl-buffer (50 mM, pH 8.0) and the cellsuspensions were analysed via SDS-PAGE (FIG. 16).

Example 14

Single Chain Antibody Expression Using an Escherichia coli SecretionSystem in High Cell Density Fermentation

Escherichia coli W3110 was transformed with plasmid pBW22-pelB-S1. Theplasmids were isolated from different clones and verified by restrictionanalysis and one clone was used for further experiments. Pre-cultures inshake flask were inoculated from single colonies in Lonza's batch phasemedium. The pre-culture was used to inoculate a 20 L fermenter. Cellswere grown according to Lonza's high cell density fermentation regime.Samples (10 ml) of the culture were taken at different time pointsbefore and after rhamnose induction. Cells were separated fromfermentation medium by centrifugation at 10,000 g. SDS gel analysis ofsamples from the cell free fermentation medium show a protein band at28.4 kD with increasing density. This protein is the single chainantibody S1 released from the growing culture into the fermentationmedium. A quantification of the S1 protein content with an Agilent 2100Bioanalyser (Agilent, Palo Alto, USA) indicated an accumulation of up to2 g/L/100 OD₆₀₀ S1 protein in the fermentation broth after rhamnoseinduction. After lysozyme treatment of the cell pellet, the insolubleprotein pellet contained only traces of the S1 protein whereas thesoluble protein fraction (supernatant) showed a strong S1 protein band,corresponding to about 1 g/L/100 OD₆₀₀ (see FIG. 17).

1. A vector expressible in a host comprising the rhaBAD promoter regionof the L-rhamnose operon operably linked to a transcriptional unitcomprising: a) a nucleic acid sequence which is heterologous to saidhost, and b) a prokaryotic signal sequence operably linked to saidnucleic acid sequence, whereas said prokaryotic signal sequence isselected from a group consisting of signal peptides of periplasmaticbinding proteins for sugars, amino acids, vitamins and ions and, whereasthe expression of said nucleic acid sequence is controlled by saidpromoter region.
 2. The vector of claim 1, wherein said promoter regionis the rhaBAD promoter.
 3. The vector of claim 2, wherein said rhaBADpromoter consists of the sequence SEQ ID NO. 1, a sequence complementarythereof and variants thereof.
 4. The vector of claim 3, wherein saidsignal peptides are selected from the group consisting of periplasmaticbinding proteins for sugars, amino acids, vitamins and ions, are E. colisignal peptides selected from the group consisting of LamB (Maltoporinprecursor), MalE (Maltose-binding protein precursor), Bla(Beta-lactamase), OppA (periplasmic oligopeptide-binding protein), TreA(periplasmic trehalase precursor), MppA (periplasmic mureinpeptide-binding protein precursor), BglX (Periplasmic beta-glucosidaseprecursor), ArgT (Lysinearginine-ornithine binding periplasmic proteinprecursor), MalS (Alpha-amylase precursor), HisJ (Histidine-bindingperiplasmic protein precursor), XylF (D-Xylose-binding periplasmicprotein precursor), FecB (dicitrate-binding periplasmic proteinprecursor), OmpA (outer membrane protein A precursor) and PhoA (Alkalinephosphatase precursor).
 5. The vector of claim 4, wherein saidtranscriptional unit further comprises, a translation initiation regionupstream of the initiation point of the translation of saidtranscriptional unit, said translation initiation region consisting ofthe sequence AGGAGATATACAT (SEQ ID NO. 2), whereas said translationinitiation region is operably linked to said nucleic acid sequence. 6.The vector of claim 5, wherein said transcriptional unit furthercomprises a transcription termination region which is rrnBtranscriptional terminator sequence.
 7. The vector of claim 6, whereinsaid nucleic acid sequence encodes a polypeptide.
 8. The vector of claim6, wherein said nucleic acid sequence encodes an antibody.
 9. The vectorof claim 6, wherein said nucleic acid sequence encodes a Fab fragment.10. The vector of claim 9, wherein the heavy and light chain of said Fabfragment are encoded by a dicistronic transcriptional unit, whereas eachchain is operably linked to said prokaryotic signal sequence and anidentical translation initiation region upstream of the initiation pointof the translation of said transcriptional unit.
 11. The vector of claim10, wherein said rhaBAD promoter region and said operably linkedtranscriptional unit consists of sequence SEQ ID NO. 3, a sequencecomplementary thereof and variants thereof.
 12. The vector of claim 10,wherein said rhaBAD promoter region and said operably linkedtranscriptional unit consists of sequence SEQ ID NO. 4, a sequencecomplementary thereof and variants thereof.
 13. The vector of claim 12,wherein said vector is an autonomously or self-replicating plasmid, acosmid, a phage, a virus or a retrovirus.
 14. A process for utilizingthe vector of claim 13, for regulated heterologous expression of anucleic acid sequence in a prokaryotic host.
 15. The process ofutilizing the vector of claim 14, wherein said nucleic acid sequenceencodes for a polypeptide.
 16. The process of utilizing the vector ofclaim 15, wherein said polypeptide is a Fab fragment, whereas heavy andlight chains of the Fab fragment are expressed in equal amounts.
 17. Anisolated and purified nucleic acid sequence expressible in a hostcomprising rhaBAD promoter region of L-rhamnose operon operably linkedto a transcriptional unit comprising: a) a nucleic acid sequence whichis heterologous to said host, and b) a prokaryotic signal sequenceoperably linked to said nucleic acid sequence, whereas said prokaryoticsignal sequence is selected from the group consisting of signal peptidesof periplasmatic binding proteins for sugars, amino acids, vitamins andions and, whereas the expression of said nucleic acid sequence iscontrolled by said promoter region.
 18. The isolated and purifiednucleic acid sequence of claim 17, wherein said promoter region is therhaBAD promoter.
 19. The isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence ofclaim 18, wherein said rhaBAD promoter consists of sequence SEQ ID NO.1, a sequence complementary thereof and variants thereof.
 20. Theisolated and purified nucleic acid sequence of claim 19, wherein saidrhaBAD promoter region and said operably linked transcriptional unitconsists of sequence SEQ ID NO. 3, a sequence complementary thereof andvariants thereof.
 21. The isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence ofclaim 19, wherein said rhaBAD promoter region and said operably linkedtranscriptional unit consists of sequence SEQ ID NO. 4, a sequencecomplementary thereof and variants thereof.
 22. Plasmid pBW22-Fab-H. 23.Plasmid pAKL14.
 24. A prokaryotic host transformed with the vector ofclaim
 13. 25. A prokaryotic host transformed with the isolated andpurified nucleic acid sequence of claim
 21. 26. A prokaryotic hosttransformed with the plasmids of claim
 23. 27. A method for producing apolypeptide in a host, comprising the steps of: a) constructing a vectorof claim 13, b) transforming a prokaryotic host with said vector, c)allowing expression of said polypeptide in a cell culture system undersuitable conditions, and d) recovering said polypeptide from the cellculture system.
 28. The method of claim 27, whereas the polypeptideproduced is a Fab fragment, whereas heavy and light chains of the Fabfragment are expressed in said cell culture system in equal amounts. 29.The method of claim 28, whereas expression of said polypeptide iscarried out in glycerol containing medium.
 30. A vector expressible in ahost comprising a promoter region operably linked to a transcriptionalunit comprising: a) a nucleic acid sequence which is heterologous tosaid host, and b) a translation initiation region upstream of initiationpoint of the translation of said transcriptional unit, said translationinitiation region consisting of sequence AGGAGATATACAT (SEQ ID NO. 2),whereas said translation initiation region is operably linked to saidnucleic acid sequence and the expression of said nucleic acid sequenceis controlled by said promoter region.
 31. The vector of claim 30,wherein said promoter region is rhaBAD promoter region of L-rhamnoseoperon.
 32. The vector of claim 31, wherein said transcriptional unitfurther comprises a signal sequence operably linked to said nucleic acidsequence.
 33. The vector of claim 32, wherein said nucleic acid sequenceencodes a polypeptide.
 34. The vector of claim 32, wherein said nucleicacid sequence encodes an antibody.
 35. The vector of claim 32, whereinsaid nucleic acid sequence encodes a Fab fragment.
 36. The vector ofclaim 35, wherein heavy and the light chain of said Fab fragment areencoded by a dicistronic transcriptional unit, whereas each chain isoperably linked to said signal sequence and said translation initiationregion.
 37. A method for producing a polypeptide in a host, comprisingthe steps of: a) constructing a vector of claim 36, b) transforming aprokaryotic host with said vector, c) allowing expression of saidpolypeptide in a cell culture system under suitable conditions, and d)recovering said polypeptide from the cell culture system.
 38. The methodof claim 37, whereas the polypeptide produced is a Fab fragment, whereasheavy and light chains of the Fab fragment are expressed in said cellculture system in equal amounts.
 39. The vector of claim 1, wherein saidsignal peptides is selected from the group consisting of periplasmaticbinding proteins for sugars, amino acids, vitamins and ions, are E. colisignal peptides selected from the group consisting of LamB (Maltoporinprecursor), MalE (Maltose-binding protein precursor), Bla(Beta-lactamase), OppA (periplasmic oligopeptide-binding protein), TreA(periplasmic trehalase precursor), MppA (periplasmic mureinpeptide-binding protein precursor), BglX (Periplasmic beta-glucosidaseprecursor), ArgT (Lysinearginine-ornithine binding periplasmic proteinprecursor), MalS (Alpha-amylase precursor), HisJ (Histidine-bindingperiplasmic protein precursor), XylF (D-Xylose-binding periplasmicprotein precursor), FecB (dicitrate-binding periplasmic proteinprecursor), OmpA (outer membrane protein A precursor) and PhoA (Alkalinephosphatase precursor).
 40. The vector of claim 1, wherein saidtranscriptional unit further comprises, a translation initiation regionupstream of initiation point of the translation of said transcriptionalunit, said translation initiation region consisting of sequenceAGGAGATATACAT (SEQ ID NO. 2), wherein said translation initiation regionis operably linked to said nucleic acid sequence.
 41. The vector ofclaim 1, wherein said transcriptional unit further comprises atranscription termination region which is the rrnB transcriptionalterminator sequence.
 42. The vector of claim 1, wherein said nucleicacid sequence encodes a polypeptide.
 43. The vector of claim 1, whereinsaid nucleic acid sequence encodes an antibody.
 44. The vector of claim1, wherein said nucleic acid sequence encodes a Fab fragment.
 45. Thevector of claim 44, wherein heavy and light chain of said Fab fragmentare encoded by a dicistronic transcriptional unit, whereas each chain isoperably linked to said prokaryotic signal sequence and an identicaltranslation initiation region upstream of initiation point of thetranslation of said transcriptional unit.
 46. The vector of claim 1,wherein said rhaBAD promoter region and said operably linkedtranscriptional unit consists of sequence SEQ ID NO. 3, a sequencecomplementary thereof and variants thereof.
 47. The vector of claim 1,wherein said rhaBAD promoter region and said operably linkedtranscriptional unit consists of sequence SEQ ID NO. 4, a sequencecomplementary thereof and variants thereof.
 48. The vector of claim 1,wherein said vector is an autonomously or self-replicating plasmid, acosmid, a phage, a virus or a retrovirus.
 49. A process for utilizingthe vector of claim 1, for the regulated heterologous expression of anucleic acid sequence in a prokaryotic host.
 50. The isolated andpurified nucleic acid sequence of claim 17, wherein said rhaBAD promoterregion and said operably linked transcriptional unit consists ofsequence SEQ ID NO. 3, a sequence complementary thereof and variantsthereof.
 51. The isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence of claim17, wherein said rhaBAD promoter region and said operably linkedtranscriptional unit consists of sequence SEQ ID NO. 4, a sequencecomplementary thereof and variants thereof.
 52. A prokaryotic hosttransformed with the vector of claim
 1. 53. A prokaryotic hosttransformed with the isolated and purified nucleic acid sequence ofclaim
 17. 54. A prokaryotic host transformed with the plasmids of claim22.
 55. A method for producing a polypeptide in a host, comprising thesteps of: a) constructing a vector of claim 7, b) transforming aprokaryotic host with said vector, c) allowing expression of saidpolypeptide in a cell culture system under suitable conditions, and d)recovering said polypeptide from the cell culture system.
 56. The methodof claim 55, wherein expression of said polypeptide is carried out inglycerol containing medium.
 57. The vector of claim 30, wherein saidtranscriptional unit further comprises a signal sequence operably linkedto said nucleic acid sequence.
 58. The vector of claim 30, wherein saidnucleic acid sequence encodes a polypeptide.
 59. The vector of claim 30,wherein said nucleic acid sequence encodes an antibody.
 60. The vectorof claim 30, wherein said nucleic acid sequence encodes a Fab fragment.61. A method for producing a polypeptide in a host, comprising the stepsof: a) constructing a vector of claim 30, b) transforming a prokaryotichost with said vector, c) allowing expression of said polypeptide in acell culture system under suitable conditions, and d) recovering saidpolypeptide from the cell culture system